news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5219526.stm
Twin blasts 'kill 27' in Baghdad
The car bomb caused substantial damage to buildingsTwo explosions in a central Baghdad district have killed at least 27 people, Iraqi police say.
The blasts happened in the commercial district of Karrada, a mostly Shia area. At least 101 people were injured.
A car bomb went off near a restaurant popular with Iraqi police. Then several mortars exploded near a petrol station, damaging nearby buildings.
The attacks shattered the relative peace which fell on the city on Wednesday, says the BBC's Jane Peel.
Many of the injured were said to be in a serious condition.
Karrada - a largely peaceful district populated mainly by Shia Muslims - is also home to Sunnis and Christians who mingle together in the local restaurants and coffee shops.
It is also well protected with a heavy presence of Iraqi troops and several checkpoints, our correspondent says.
Separately, there are reports that gunmen have killed four security guards outside a Sunni mosque in western Baghdad.
US deployment
On Tuesday, President Bush announced that US troops would be deployed to the Iraqi capital to deal with the deteriorating security situation.
The deployments would "better reflect the current conditions on the ground", he said at a joint news conference in Washington with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki.
The troops would help to secure suburbs where militants operated, he said.
An average of more than 100 civilians per day were killed in Iraqi violence in May and June, according to the UN.
The security plan was the second announced for Baghdad in the past six weeks.
Iraq has experienced an upsurge in sectarian violence in recent months.
Last Sunday, at least 34 people were killed in a blast in Sadr City - a mainly Shia area in the capital.
Twin blasts 'kill 27' in Baghdad
The car bomb caused substantial damage to buildingsTwo explosions in a central Baghdad district have killed at least 27 people, Iraqi police say.
The blasts happened in the commercial district of Karrada, a mostly Shia area. At least 101 people were injured.
A car bomb went off near a restaurant popular with Iraqi police. Then several mortars exploded near a petrol station, damaging nearby buildings.
The attacks shattered the relative peace which fell on the city on Wednesday, says the BBC's Jane Peel.
Many of the injured were said to be in a serious condition.
Karrada - a largely peaceful district populated mainly by Shia Muslims - is also home to Sunnis and Christians who mingle together in the local restaurants and coffee shops.
It is also well protected with a heavy presence of Iraqi troops and several checkpoints, our correspondent says.
Separately, there are reports that gunmen have killed four security guards outside a Sunni mosque in western Baghdad.
US deployment
On Tuesday, President Bush announced that US troops would be deployed to the Iraqi capital to deal with the deteriorating security situation.
The deployments would "better reflect the current conditions on the ground", he said at a joint news conference in Washington with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki.
The troops would help to secure suburbs where militants operated, he said.
An average of more than 100 civilians per day were killed in Iraqi violence in May and June, according to the UN.
The security plan was the second announced for Baghdad in the past six weeks.
Iraq has experienced an upsurge in sectarian violence in recent months.
Last Sunday, at least 34 people were killed in a blast in Sadr City - a mainly Shia area in the capital.
Unknown numbers murdered, dozen still illegally held
BRussells Tribunal press release 22 November 2006.
[For urgent release]
* About the campaign to save Iraq's academics.
Summary of Events
On Tuesday 14 November paramilitary gunmen in the uniforms of Iraqi National Police commandos raided a building belonging to the Ministry of Education in Baghdad’s Karrada district and arrested around 100 members of staff from two departments and around 50 visitors, according to lists compiled by the Minister of Education.
The raid took place in broad daylight, 1km from the Green Zone, in an area that contained several high-security compounds, including the department where passports are issued. According to a BBC correspondent the Karrada area, occupying an isthmus in the River Tigris, is ‘well protected with a heavy presence of Iraqi troops and several checkpoints’. The paramilitary force estimated at between at least 50 and 100 arrived in a fleet of some 20-30 camouflage pickup trucks of the kind employed by the Interior Ministry and rapidly established a cordon of the area. They stated that they were from an anti-corruption unit and were carrying out arrests ahead of a visit by the US ambassador. The paramilitaries made their arrests according to lists, confirming the identities of those present by their ID cards, then handcuffed and blindfolded the detainees and put them into the backs of pickups and into two larger vehicles.
The paramilitaries then made their exit through heavy traffic without opposition, despite the reported presence of a regular police vehicle. According to some witnesses, the paramilitaries made off in the direction of Sadr City.
The Iraqi government quickly declared that the number of detainees was far lower (18 guards, 16 members of staff and five visitors) and by Wednesday claimed that all of the detainees had been released after a series of dramatic police raids. A number of senior policemen, including the district police chief and the commander of a National Police paramilitary commando brigade and three other officers were reportedly detained for questioning over possible complicity. According to one report, an Interior Ministry spokesman claimed the senior police commanders ‘should be held responsible’.
Prime Minister Maliki declared that this was not a case of terrorism, but a dispute between ‘militias’.
The Education Ministry insisted that both Sunnis and Shiites were among those illegally detained.
US commanders stated that they would support all efforts to free the detainees.
By Thursday the Education Minister stated that around 70 of 150 detainees had been released and reported that some of those released had been tortured (some legs and hands had been broken) and that there were allegations that others had been killed.
On Friday Mowaffak Rubiae, the National Security Advisor, stated that all of the detainees had been released, although an Interior Ministry spokesmen claimed that all of the Education Ministry personnel had been released but some of the visitors detained were still missing.
One of the detainees, who refused to reveal his actual name, said that his arm had been broken while in detention. He also described seeing three security guards suffocated to death and hearing a number of senior academics who had been put in a separate screaming in agony; according to the witness their cries were cut off abruptly.
The witness also said that he had not been releasd as the result of a dramatic police raid. His captors had simply dragged him and others from the building where they were held, put them back into trucks and dumped them at various locations around Baghdad. His account is confirmed by earlier reports, which stated that those released had been blindfolded and deposited in various parts of Baghdad.
Five more detainees were reportedly released on Friday. They had been tortured.
On Saturday the Education Ministry continued to insist that 66 people were still missing.
The Interior Ministry spokesman said that all of the detainees had been released and the matter was now closed.
Joint US and Iraqi forces conducted a raid on a mosque in Sadr City on Saturday. None of the detainees were found.
On Sunday a further four detainees were released, who reported seeing one Ministry official, Hamid al-Jouani, killed.
On Monday joint US and Iraqi forces conducted another raid in Sadr City. None of the detainees were found.
Unanswered Questions
From the above description of events drawn from mainstream media sources (please see references at end) making use of government statements and eyewitness testimony it is clear that the raid on the Interior Ministry was carried out as a complex military operation requiring detailed intelligence, careful preparation and extensive training. In fact, everything about this raid conforms with what we should expect of an operation conducted by Iraq’s new US-trained, armed and supported specialist counterinsurgency paramilitary National Police commandos, who are specifically trained to conduct cordon and search operations of this kind.
It is impossible to believe that any forces but officially sanctioned ones could have made such a daring daylight assault in one of the most secure areas of Baghdad. It is equally impossible to believe that any forces but Interior Ministry ones could have assembled a fleet of Interior Ministry camouflage pickup trucks. The designation of the paramilitaries responsible for this outrage as Interior Ministry commandos is fully confirmed by eyewitness testimony, which specifies that at least some of the raiders were wearing blue camouflage uniforms of a type very recently introduced to National Police commandos, specifically intended to prevent any other parties from masquerading as National Police commandos. The digitally designed uniforms are supplied by the US. A US Army spokesman was so convinced that the uniforms would have been impossible to replicate that he stated that the raiders could not have been wearing such uniforms. Of course, he was not at the scene. Eyewitnesses contradict him.
The fact that the raid was conducted by Interior Ministry forces was in fact confirmed by Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh, who claimed the mass detention was the work of militiamen who had infiltrated the Interior Ministry.
Since it is almost certain that the raid was carried out by National Police commandos, it is imperative that the following questions are answered immediately and publicly.
· Which National Police or other Interior Ministry force carried out the raid?
· Under whose authority was the raid authorised?
· From whom did the Interior Ministry force obtain the lists of names that were used to select individuals for arrest?
· Where were the international advisers (Special Police Transition Teams) that are embedded with each battalion of National Police Commandos and work with them on a daily basis?
· Where did the police commandos take the detainees?
· Why were aerial surveillance assets not immediately deployed to follow a fleet of pickup trucks through heavy traffic in Baghdad? How many such aerial assets were operating over the Green Zone and other parts of Baghdad at that time?
· Who operates the facility where the detainees were held?
· If detainees were freed as a result of police raids, why have no large scale arrests been made and why has the only detainee to speak on record stated that no such police raid occurred?
· What are the names of the individual police officers who have been held for questioning?
· Have they been charged and if so what have they been charged with?
· Why is the Interior Ministry insisting that the case in now closed, when the Education Minister has provided a list of the name of further detainees and the subsequent release of additional detainees demonstrates that he is wrong.
· Why is the Interior Ministry insisting that none of the detainees were killed when eyewitnesses reported seeing people brutally murdered in front of them?
· How is it that paramilitary/militia death squads can operate from the Interior Ministry, making full use of US-supplied government equipment, without the knowledge of embedded international training teams and advisors within the Interior Ministry?
It is absolutely clear that neither in this case nor in any of the multitude of other equally harrowing cases that show Interior Ministry involvement with extrajudicial killing can the Iraqi government be trusted with carrying any sort of investigation. In the case of the Jadiriyah torture facility discovered in November 2005, the government has still to make public findings that were promised within weeks. It should also be noted that at that time, US officials promised to increase their efforts to oversee Iraqi detention facilities and police commando units, stating that they would double the number of embedded trainers. Since that promise, extrajudicial killings at the hands of Interior Ministry forces, mostly inside detention facilities, appears to have grown exponentially.
It is equally clear that US authorities in Iraq have no interest in carrying out an investigation or restraining the killers.
It is therefore imperative for teams of international investigators to take on the task with the full cooperation of British and American forces. Manfred Novak, the UN rapporteur for torture has indicated his willingness to undertake such a mission. Such a mission must be immediately supported by all those who honestly claim to seek to halt the genocidal violence in Iraq; those who will not support such a mission must be considered accomplices to crimes against humanity.
References
Five police chiefs arrested after mass kidnapping
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,20761611-401,00.html
Fate of Iraq Education Ministry abductees remains unclear
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/1115/dailyUpdate.html
Desperate search after mass-kidnapping of Sunnis ends with hostages found alive
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article1984455.ece
Iraq hostages 'freed by police'
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/6149110.stm
Iraq: Kidnapped People Have Been Freed
http://www.abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=2655349
Iraq minister says some hostages tortured, killed
http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=topNews&storyid=2006-11-16T123016Z_01_IBO132069_RTRUKOC_0_US-IRAQ.xml&src=rss
Iraq ministry hostages 'tortured
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/6153316.stm
Arrest of Sunni Leader Sought in Iraq
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-6219741,00.html
US warns Iraq against sectarianism
http://timesofmalta.com/core/article.php?id=243588
Coalition Forces Conduct Raid in Iraq
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-6227509,00.html
Bloodshed piles pressure on Iraq govt
http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3867624a12aT,00.html
Iraq police rebrand to foil fakes
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/6034975.stm
New uniforms to tackle Iraq killings
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/archive/archive?ArchiveId=36667
The appeal to save Iraqi academics, launched in January 2006 by the BRussells Tribunal, a network of human rights activists, intellectuals and artists, has called for the protection of local academics and higher level educational institutions, in cooperation with CEOSI (Spain), the Portuguese hearing of the WTI, Iraktribunal.de (Germany), the Swedish Antiwar committee, the International Action Center (USA), the International Association of Middle East Studies (IAMES), the German Middle East Studies Association (DAVO), the European Association for Middle Eastern Studies (EURAMES), and several personalities, like Harold Pinter, José Saramago, Dario Fo, Howard Zinn, Tony Benn, Eduardo Galeano, John Pilger, John Coetzee, Michael Parenti and many others. See the list of principal endorsers: http://www.brusselstribunal.org/AcademicsPetitionList.htm . The BRussells Tribunal, part of a worldwide network (the International Anti-Occupation Network), devoted to campaigning against the US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq, notes the “systematic liquidation of the country's academics" and is planning further actions to protect the brains that can contribute to the development of the Iraqi society. You can read and sign the petition online http://www.petitiononline.com/Iraqacad/petition.html: info More . at contact info@brusselstribunal.org
BRussells Tribunal press release 22 November 2006.
[For urgent release]
* About the campaign to save Iraq's academics.
Summary of Events
On Tuesday 14 November paramilitary gunmen in the uniforms of Iraqi National Police commandos raided a building belonging to the Ministry of Education in Baghdad’s Karrada district and arrested around 100 members of staff from two departments and around 50 visitors, according to lists compiled by the Minister of Education.
The raid took place in broad daylight, 1km from the Green Zone, in an area that contained several high-security compounds, including the department where passports are issued. According to a BBC correspondent the Karrada area, occupying an isthmus in the River Tigris, is ‘well protected with a heavy presence of Iraqi troops and several checkpoints’. The paramilitary force estimated at between at least 50 and 100 arrived in a fleet of some 20-30 camouflage pickup trucks of the kind employed by the Interior Ministry and rapidly established a cordon of the area. They stated that they were from an anti-corruption unit and were carrying out arrests ahead of a visit by the US ambassador. The paramilitaries made their arrests according to lists, confirming the identities of those present by their ID cards, then handcuffed and blindfolded the detainees and put them into the backs of pickups and into two larger vehicles.
The paramilitaries then made their exit through heavy traffic without opposition, despite the reported presence of a regular police vehicle. According to some witnesses, the paramilitaries made off in the direction of Sadr City.
The Iraqi government quickly declared that the number of detainees was far lower (18 guards, 16 members of staff and five visitors) and by Wednesday claimed that all of the detainees had been released after a series of dramatic police raids. A number of senior policemen, including the district police chief and the commander of a National Police paramilitary commando brigade and three other officers were reportedly detained for questioning over possible complicity. According to one report, an Interior Ministry spokesman claimed the senior police commanders ‘should be held responsible’.
Prime Minister Maliki declared that this was not a case of terrorism, but a dispute between ‘militias’.
The Education Ministry insisted that both Sunnis and Shiites were among those illegally detained.
US commanders stated that they would support all efforts to free the detainees.
By Thursday the Education Minister stated that around 70 of 150 detainees had been released and reported that some of those released had been tortured (some legs and hands had been broken) and that there were allegations that others had been killed.
On Friday Mowaffak Rubiae, the National Security Advisor, stated that all of the detainees had been released, although an Interior Ministry spokesmen claimed that all of the Education Ministry personnel had been released but some of the visitors detained were still missing.
One of the detainees, who refused to reveal his actual name, said that his arm had been broken while in detention. He also described seeing three security guards suffocated to death and hearing a number of senior academics who had been put in a separate screaming in agony; according to the witness their cries were cut off abruptly.
The witness also said that he had not been releasd as the result of a dramatic police raid. His captors had simply dragged him and others from the building where they were held, put them back into trucks and dumped them at various locations around Baghdad. His account is confirmed by earlier reports, which stated that those released had been blindfolded and deposited in various parts of Baghdad.
Five more detainees were reportedly released on Friday. They had been tortured.
On Saturday the Education Ministry continued to insist that 66 people were still missing.
The Interior Ministry spokesman said that all of the detainees had been released and the matter was now closed.
Joint US and Iraqi forces conducted a raid on a mosque in Sadr City on Saturday. None of the detainees were found.
On Sunday a further four detainees were released, who reported seeing one Ministry official, Hamid al-Jouani, killed.
On Monday joint US and Iraqi forces conducted another raid in Sadr City. None of the detainees were found.
Unanswered Questions
From the above description of events drawn from mainstream media sources (please see references at end) making use of government statements and eyewitness testimony it is clear that the raid on the Interior Ministry was carried out as a complex military operation requiring detailed intelligence, careful preparation and extensive training. In fact, everything about this raid conforms with what we should expect of an operation conducted by Iraq’s new US-trained, armed and supported specialist counterinsurgency paramilitary National Police commandos, who are specifically trained to conduct cordon and search operations of this kind.
It is impossible to believe that any forces but officially sanctioned ones could have made such a daring daylight assault in one of the most secure areas of Baghdad. It is equally impossible to believe that any forces but Interior Ministry ones could have assembled a fleet of Interior Ministry camouflage pickup trucks. The designation of the paramilitaries responsible for this outrage as Interior Ministry commandos is fully confirmed by eyewitness testimony, which specifies that at least some of the raiders were wearing blue camouflage uniforms of a type very recently introduced to National Police commandos, specifically intended to prevent any other parties from masquerading as National Police commandos. The digitally designed uniforms are supplied by the US. A US Army spokesman was so convinced that the uniforms would have been impossible to replicate that he stated that the raiders could not have been wearing such uniforms. Of course, he was not at the scene. Eyewitnesses contradict him.
The fact that the raid was conducted by Interior Ministry forces was in fact confirmed by Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh, who claimed the mass detention was the work of militiamen who had infiltrated the Interior Ministry.
Since it is almost certain that the raid was carried out by National Police commandos, it is imperative that the following questions are answered immediately and publicly.
· Which National Police or other Interior Ministry force carried out the raid?
· Under whose authority was the raid authorised?
· From whom did the Interior Ministry force obtain the lists of names that were used to select individuals for arrest?
· Where were the international advisers (Special Police Transition Teams) that are embedded with each battalion of National Police Commandos and work with them on a daily basis?
· Where did the police commandos take the detainees?
· Why were aerial surveillance assets not immediately deployed to follow a fleet of pickup trucks through heavy traffic in Baghdad? How many such aerial assets were operating over the Green Zone and other parts of Baghdad at that time?
· Who operates the facility where the detainees were held?
· If detainees were freed as a result of police raids, why have no large scale arrests been made and why has the only detainee to speak on record stated that no such police raid occurred?
· What are the names of the individual police officers who have been held for questioning?
· Have they been charged and if so what have they been charged with?
· Why is the Interior Ministry insisting that the case in now closed, when the Education Minister has provided a list of the name of further detainees and the subsequent release of additional detainees demonstrates that he is wrong.
· Why is the Interior Ministry insisting that none of the detainees were killed when eyewitnesses reported seeing people brutally murdered in front of them?
· How is it that paramilitary/militia death squads can operate from the Interior Ministry, making full use of US-supplied government equipment, without the knowledge of embedded international training teams and advisors within the Interior Ministry?
It is absolutely clear that neither in this case nor in any of the multitude of other equally harrowing cases that show Interior Ministry involvement with extrajudicial killing can the Iraqi government be trusted with carrying any sort of investigation. In the case of the Jadiriyah torture facility discovered in November 2005, the government has still to make public findings that were promised within weeks. It should also be noted that at that time, US officials promised to increase their efforts to oversee Iraqi detention facilities and police commando units, stating that they would double the number of embedded trainers. Since that promise, extrajudicial killings at the hands of Interior Ministry forces, mostly inside detention facilities, appears to have grown exponentially.
It is equally clear that US authorities in Iraq have no interest in carrying out an investigation or restraining the killers.
It is therefore imperative for teams of international investigators to take on the task with the full cooperation of British and American forces. Manfred Novak, the UN rapporteur for torture has indicated his willingness to undertake such a mission. Such a mission must be immediately supported by all those who honestly claim to seek to halt the genocidal violence in Iraq; those who will not support such a mission must be considered accomplices to crimes against humanity.
References
Five police chiefs arrested after mass kidnapping
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,20761611-401,00.html
Fate of Iraq Education Ministry abductees remains unclear
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/1115/dailyUpdate.html
Desperate search after mass-kidnapping of Sunnis ends with hostages found alive
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article1984455.ece
Iraq hostages 'freed by police'
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/6149110.stm
Iraq: Kidnapped People Have Been Freed
http://www.abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=2655349
Iraq minister says some hostages tortured, killed
http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=topNews&storyid=2006-11-16T123016Z_01_IBO132069_RTRUKOC_0_US-IRAQ.xml&src=rss
Iraq ministry hostages 'tortured
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/6153316.stm
Arrest of Sunni Leader Sought in Iraq
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-6219741,00.html
US warns Iraq against sectarianism
http://timesofmalta.com/core/article.php?id=243588
Coalition Forces Conduct Raid in Iraq
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-6227509,00.html
Bloodshed piles pressure on Iraq govt
http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3867624a12aT,00.html
Iraq police rebrand to foil fakes
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/6034975.stm
New uniforms to tackle Iraq killings
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/archive/archive?ArchiveId=36667
The appeal to save Iraqi academics, launched in January 2006 by the BRussells Tribunal, a network of human rights activists, intellectuals and artists, has called for the protection of local academics and higher level educational institutions, in cooperation with CEOSI (Spain), the Portuguese hearing of the WTI, Iraktribunal.de (Germany), the Swedish Antiwar committee, the International Action Center (USA), the International Association of Middle East Studies (IAMES), the German Middle East Studies Association (DAVO), the European Association for Middle Eastern Studies (EURAMES), and several personalities, like Harold Pinter, José Saramago, Dario Fo, Howard Zinn, Tony Benn, Eduardo Galeano, John Pilger, John Coetzee, Michael Parenti and many others. See the list of principal endorsers: http://www.brusselstribunal.org/AcademicsPetitionList.htm . The BRussells Tribunal, part of a worldwide network (the International Anti-Occupation Network), devoted to campaigning against the US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq, notes the “systematic liquidation of the country's academics" and is planning further actions to protect the brains that can contribute to the development of the Iraqi society. You can read and sign the petition online http://www.petitiononline.com/Iraqacad/petition.html: info More . at contact info@brusselstribunal.org
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